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Lately I have read a number of articles and heard a number of speakers criticise the over indulgent, over involved, over protective parents of this generation. They scorn so called “helicopter parents” for protecting their children and adolescents from what they see as normal difficulties of life, sympathetically mollycoddling them through life, constantly rescuing and intervening for them, over praising and not letting them take responsibility.

I personally heard one of these speakers - Wendy Mogul. She wrote “The Blessing of a Skinned Knee” and “The Blessing of a B minus”. She was a funny and interesting speaker. In her 15 minute presentation, she roundly (and hilariously) canned parents of today for being over indulgent and "overparenting". She has a solid following, particularly on the speakers’ circuit talking to teachers in schools internationally. Wendy and other speakers/writers who make the same claims about “helicopter parenting” are thought provoking and make excellent points.

They say some great stuff: we do need to make sure we sometimes allow children and teens to experience negative consequences of their actions, we do need to allow them to make their own decisions, we do need to be calm in the face of their distress or misfortune rather than react with panic, and we do need them to learn to communicate independently with others.

However. I think we need to be very careful with the scorn, criticism and “helicopter parenting” labels that have crept into this debate by some. Criticism, scorn and labels don’t teach parents anything – and instead potentially harm and undermine some essential parenting processes.

Last week one of my (junior primary school aged) children received a failing grade for PE. Partly this is due to a medical condition. Partly it’s because he is …well…crap at sport. After I read his report, I started thinking about going to see the PE teacher to chat about what he thinks we can do to improve his grade for next term. However, only this very week I’d been hearing and reading about helicopter parenting and for a moment I froze: "Is this "helicopter parenting"?

My natural neuroticism kicked in big time. My son had got good grades for everything else in his school report: Would me making an appointment to discuss his one failing grade be interpreted as being “over involved”? Would the PE teacher think “that over protective mother can’t bear to have her child fail even one subject, she has to intervene, what a helicopter parent!”?

I ignored these thoughts (“thankyou neurotic brain”) and my son and I together went and talked to the teacher, got some strategies for how he can get better at PE and it was a helpful conversation all round.

But my moments of doubt have got me wondering about this issue.

Are there other parents out there who are feeling anxious about “going into bat” for their children and teens for fear of being labelled a helicopter or over indulgent parent? I wouldn’t be surprised if there are. I often hear parents say “I don’t want to be over protective but….”

I’m worried that parents who are doing important life skill coaching, intervening and advocating on behalf of their kids and teens are being discouraged by the current mood/movement against helicopter parenting. Because some of what is labelled as this “helicopter parenting” is actually essential in teaching children and teens important life skills.

Here are three examples.

1. Kids and teens DO need help and coaching from adults to communicate effectively with others.

A parent I was working with the other day had serious concerns about her 13 year old daughter at school. When I asked her about the teacher’s view, she said “I haven’t talked to the teacher. Isn’t that my daughter’s job?”. Well, maybe. But from a pragmatic point of view, the daughter had chosen not to discuss these issues with anyone, and they had existed (and escalated over the course of a year). I convinced the Mum to make an appointment with the teacher, and take her daughter along. I talked with the daughter before the meeting about what she needed to say, what questions she needed to ask – and no surprise, once the three of them met, they solved the problems super fast.

Personally, I usually get my young children to communicate themselves with their teachers about issues – but I come along to give them some back up and prompting if needed. Same goes with communicating with other kids they are having problems with: they can do it themselves, providing they have support, coaching and back up – and not just left to their own skills and devices. Children and teens can’t and don’t communicate well unless they are trained, coached and supported over time. It’s not helicopter parenting, it’s called teaching, learning and advocating for your child/teen.

Critics of helicopter parenting often say things like “parents rescue their children from the hard lessons of life and this resucing means they never learn”. Frankly, I don’t actually think the hard lessons of life actually teach much at all a lot of the time. Take school for example: I have seen many students who HAVE had plenty of failing grades throughout their schooling – and they haven’t learnt from the experience at all.

Many children and teens get in trouble, lose privileges, experience hard lessons – time and time again, and nothing changes. Much of the time, these so called “lessons” teach nothing. Instead, the child or teen needs help in finding systems and habits for them to succeed. It is success (even if it is coached success) which increases independence - far more than the failure does.

One of my children was consistently forgotting to bring his homework text book home – one night, hoping to teach him a lesson, I said he would have to write out all the questions by hand himself, which took him twice as long and he effectively lost his screen time that night. Well I thought, satisfied, that will teach him and he won't do that again. Nope. He forgot it again the very next day. This time, I talked him through a system he could use to remember his homework book. He hasnt forgotten it since. Failure didnt help, coaching did.

I know a teen who got detention after detention for being late to school – she was getting plenty of “hard lessons” but was learning nothing. Her parent eventually went to the school and asked for a meeting, and they sorted out why she was late and what she could do to change it. No more detentions.

Failure, or hard experiences sometimes teach something. Being coached to succeed and being helped to get it right - teaches a whole lot more.

3. Kids and teens do better with sympathy and empathic carers.

Helicopter parents are criticised for being too sympathetic. We are told that a “buck up and get over it” attitude somehow toughens up young people. The opposite is actually true. Giving a hug and a bandaid to a child with a skinned knee helps them learn how to soothe themselves faster than ignoring their cries. Telling your teen, “that really sucks, I’m really sorry that happened” helps them find the capacity to move on quicker than if you say “oh well life happens”.

Research about parenting styles shows that parents who are sympathetic and caring have better adjusted children and teens than parents who ignore kids'' sadness, are harder, less sympathetic and cold.

So now what?

Does any of this suggest that we do everything for the child/teen and save them from anything bad that might happen. Of course not. But children and teens are not adults. They need supporting, coaching, advice, sympathy and help. And it is a parents’ job to do this.

As far as I’m concerned if you are a helicopter parent (or a helicopter teacher) – make sure your focus is on coaching and helping your children and students learn the skills they need as adults - and if what you are doing is in the service of that goal – then hover, hover, hover – as much as needed.